Utah kind of is a repeat from 1956. Mormon women wanted to make a statement about their role in the church so a bunch of them went to church in pants instead of skirts. It's a little progress-resistant bubble.

BizarreMan:So I pulled up the song list on Wikipedia for the play and the only song that I can think might cause problems in Utah is maybe "A little less conversation".

The SLTrib article suggests the offensive content might be a scene where "a girl dresses up as a boy and kisses a boy." Mormons have a real stick up their collective asses when it comes to gender identity, having a lot to do with gender/sex being an inherent part of one's eternal identity and role on Earth. So for them, there is no blurring that line. Seriously, that's why Mormon women wearing pants to church was a big deal and brought backlash. They even ban cross-dressing on Halloween. Eternally grateful I wasn't born into that ideological swamp.

I mean, I knew a girl, right, who'd only have sex with a guy if he had a farkin' accent. Can you think of anything more ludacris in your life? So every asshole in Salt Lake City, and let me tell ya, plenty assholes in this general region, that wanna do a little of this, would get her drunk and put on some kind of stupid farking accent like 'Ello mistress, do you fancy a shag?' And there she would, farkin' knees to the sky. It was sad, it made me really sad. Poor girl had no self respect.

NPR was interviewing a guy who had majored in theater at a university in Utah. They knew that every play their department staged would be shut down, it was only a matter of how many peformances they could get away with before that happened. So they would rehearse, make costumes, etc. and try to keep the location and date of the opening secret from all but a select few.